More than a third of early years providers in England planning to increase childcare fees this year say they would not do so if government funding was enough to adequately cover their costs, while four in 10 said that they would be raising childcare fees by a smaller amount, a new survey of nearly 2,000 nurseries, pre-schools and childminders by leading early years organisation the Early Years Alliance has revealed.

 

The survey, which was run in parallel with the parent survey launched by campaign group Pregnant Then Screwed and parenting forum Mumsnet, also published today, ran from 17 – 22 March 2022 and received 1,970 responses.

 

It found that:

 

 

The survey also reveals the toll that government underfunding is putting on the early years workforce itself. It found that:
 

In a damning indictment of government policy, a huge 98% of respondents say the government isn’t doing enough to support the early years sector.  

The parallel parent survey carried out by Pregnant Then Screwed and Mumset of around 27,000 parents found that:

 

 

 

Commenting, Neil Leitch, Neil Leitch, chief executive of the Early Years Alliance, said: 

“It is unacceptable that so many parents are not only struggling to meet their childcare costs, but often are also being forced to make sacrifices in their careers as the result of a lack of affordable, accessible care and education.

 “Early years funding has continually failed to keep up with soaring costs, leaving many providers with no choice but to increase fees in the coming year: it speaks volumes that over a third of our survey respondents said that if they were sufficiently funded, they wouldn’t be raising fees at all this year.

“With the vast majority of providers saying that the funding they receive is less than the cost of delivering places and even more worryingly, with even those that are set to receive funding increases in April telling us that this won’t be not enough to cover delivery costs, things are going to get a lot worse before they get better.

“Providers are now facing a cliff edge, with more than a third of early years businesses currently operating at a loss (30%) and even more (34%) expecting to operate at a loss in a years’ time – but this could all be avoided if the government finally admitted there is a problem and took action to plug the widening funding gap.’’ 

 

“Early years providers offer a lifeline for working parents and vital early education for young children, but it is becoming near-impossible for them to offer these critical services at affordable prices. The government needs to address the sector’s funding gap before more parents – and especially mothers – are forced to pay ever-increasing prices and compromise their careers to ensure their child can receive good quality care and education.”

 

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